Andorra: “Remaining gaps in human rights protection should be
filled”
Andorra La Vella, 17/2/2012 –“The
Andorran authorities intend to respect their obligations to ensure human
rights protection in the country. However, further efforts are needed,
for example to prevent domestic violence, protect against
discrimination, and promote national independent monitoring of human
rights standards”, said the Council of Europe Commissioner for human
rights, Thomas Hammarberg, at the end of a two-day visit to the country.
The Commissioner recommends that the authorities continue to give
priority to extending assistance to victims of domestic violence and to
allow longer stays in the shelter. “As in other places, in Andorra
victims of domestic violence tend to suffer in silence. Measures to
better protect such persons, who are predominantly women, should be
adopted, including a wider use of restraining orders to oblige offenders
to leave the house, the adoption of a specific law addressing
gender-based violence, awareness-raising to dismantle cultural
stereotypes and measures to address the reluctance of those subject to
violence to report the problem.” Commissioner Hammarberg also calls for
an explicit prohibition of corporal punishment of children.
In relation to discrimination issues, the Commissioner calls upon the
Andorran government to ease the requirements to apply for Andorran
citizenship. “As the Andorran authorities themselves have recognised,
the 20-year residence requirement is far too long. In this connection
the Commissioner recommends the ratification by Andorra of the European
Convention on Nationality.”
Discrimination against persons with disabilities in employment,
education, access to health care, or in the provision of other state
services is prohibited. However, non-governmental organisations have
pointed out that there is a gap in what is written in the law and the
situation in reality. “This gap must be bridged” added the Commissioner,
“there is the need to increase the awareness about the rights of persons
with disabilities and the removal of all barriers, physical and
cultural, which impede persons with disabilities from living in dignity.
Some of the officials met by the Commissioner stressed the need to
conduct evaluation to ensure the proper implementation and effectiveness
of social assistance programme. This is all the more important in period
of economic crisis. As concerns monitoring of human rights standards by
independent national bodies, the Commissioner considers it necessary to
reinforce the national system in order to ensure that the country has a
national mechanism for the prevention of torture.
Finally, in view of the Chairmanship of the Council of Europe Committee
of Ministers that Andorra will take up next November, the Commissioner
recommends the ratification of several treaties, including the Council
of Europe conventions on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women
and Domestic Violence and on the Protection of Children against Sexual
Exploitation and Sexual Abuse, as well as the UN Convention on the
Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
Press contact in the Commissioner’s Office:
Stefano Montanari, +33 (0)6 61 14 70 37;
stefano.montanari@coe.int Keep up to date with the Commissioner on
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